Trying to Select a Class Pin

17-year-old Helena Muffly wrote exactly 100 years ago today:

Wednesday, September 17, 1912: Had to walk to school through the rain. Also through the mud. Our class is deciding upon a class pin, but we’re making such slow progress in making up our minds as to which pin to take, that I doubt we’ll ever get them at all.

Recent photo of the building that once housed McEwensville High School.

Her middle-aged granddaughter’s comments 100 years later:

Yuck—a mile and a half walk to school in the rain on muddy dirt roads. It sure doesn’t sound like fun. Did Grandma wear galoshes to school?

Did Grandma and her classmates have a catalog that they were going to order the class pin out of? . . . or were they planning to order it from a sales representative or at a nearby jewelry shop?

Grandma’s class was small. Only six students graduated in Spring 1913 from McEwensville High School. It’s amazing how much effort they put into creating a class identity. A few days previous to this diary entry, Grandma wrote about the differences in opinion about class colors and now they can’t seem to agree on a class pin.

I can see why it was given so much attention. Pins were so important in their fashions and had been for decades. I have my husband’s great grandmothers little pocket watch that is dated 1912 and it’s long chain with a pin and a little diamond on the slider. It was worn around the neck and pinned on the shirt or jacket. No one wanted it because they didn’t know it was solid gold and it needed fixed. I kept my mouth shut and have taken very good care of it and had it cleaned. She was given it as a gift when she was 13. There was also a broken cameo that I just love but never had it reset. She also wore in her teens. Buying a class pin would have been a big purchase for them and price would have been a major issue. I bet the class colors were picked for that pin.

I still do and get the eye roll from my daughter!! LOL She has to tell us to pick up at the “old high school” because my mind can’t compute the new name for that building… student something or other… 😉